Bertita Harding

Bertita Harding
Born Bertita Loenarz
1 November 1902
Nuremberg, Bavaria
Died 31 December 1971 (aged 69)
Mexico City
Occupation Writer
Notable works Phantom Crown: The Story of Maximilian and Carlota of Mexico

Bertita Harding (11 November 1902 – 31 December 1971) was a royal biographer with an easy and sometimes humorous style that made her a popular author.

Her book Phantom Crown, a biography of the tragic life of Emperor Maximilano and his wife Carlota of Mexico was turned into a screenplay by John Huston for the film Juarez (1939). Magic Fire, her biography of Richard Wagner, was made into a German film by William Dieterle in 1955.

Life

She was born as Bertita Carla Camille Leonarz on 1 November 1902 in Nuremberg, Bavaria. Her father, Emile Leonarz, was an engineer from the Rhineland. While working on a public street lighting project in Budapest in 1896, he married the Hungarian Countess Sarolta Poszte-Karoly. The couple had five children, two of which died in 1903 during a diphtheria outbreak.[1]

In 1904 the family moved briefly to Berlin and the following year to Mexico city where the father worked as general director of the Mexican steel industry. It was in Mexico city were Bertita was raised and spent her formative years. Her childhood was one of privilege. She attended a catholic school, made trips to Europe and the United States and learned German, Spanish, English Hungarian and French. In 1912 the family moved to Monterrey. It was at this time that she began piano lessons. Her parents destined her to follow a career as a concert pianist.[2]

In 1923, she was sent to the United States to improve her English at Wisconsin University. While there, she met Jack Harding, a British born American, who worked as advertising agent. The couple married on 7 October 1926 and settled in Indianapolis, Indiana. Bertita became a naturalized American citizen in 1927 and began to have some success as concert pianist.

At the age of 28 she abandoned her career as a pianist and started to write Phantom Crown: The Story of Maximilian and Carlota of Mexico. The book sold well. In the following years she continued to publish more books about royalty and she became a well-known author. Her first book, Phantom Crown, was turned into a screenplay by John Huston for the film Juarez (1939). Invited by Warner Brothers, the studio that made Juarez, she moved with her husband to Hollywood in 1940 as she was offered a job as a writer for the studio. She spent winters in Indianapolis and the summers in Mexico.[3]

In 1940 she made a trip to Brazil that inspired her books on the House of Braganza of Brazil. The following year she began a career as lecturer, giving more than 120 lectures throughout the United States. During World War II her husband served as lieutenant colonel and she sold war bonds on support of the troops. In the last part of the 1940s Bertita published The Land Columbus loved, a traveling book written with her husband, and wrote, Mosaic, in the Fountain, an autobiographical book covering her childhood. The couple had an active social live and travel extensively as Bertita continued her series of lectures around the United States.

After the death of her husband in 1953, she sold her house in Indianapolis moving permanently to Mexico City. Her biography of Richard Wagner, was made into a German film, Magic Fire, by William Dieterle in 1955. She attended the premier of the film in London.

In 1957 she married Count Josef Radetzky. The couple adopted a four-year-old Mexican orphan named Katya, but the marriage lasted less than one year.[4]

In 1961 she published her last book Concerto: a biography of Clara Schumann. Bertita retired to her Spanish Villa at Lomas of Chapultepec, spending her time painting. She did not finish a biography of Haile Selassie Emperor of Etiopia. She fought breast cancer that metastasized to the bones.[5]

In May 1971 she married Halstead P. Councilman, an American business man who had been her friend for years. She died the same year on 31 December 1971.[6]

Books

Notes

  1. Rodríguez Romero, Domingo. " Bertita Harding . Cronologia". Editorial Nortesur. Retrieved 2013-08-16.
  2. Rodríguez Romero, Domingo. " Bertita Harding . Cronologia". Editorial Nortesur. Retrieved 2013-08-16.
  3. Rodríguez Romero, Domingo. " Bertita Harding . Cronologia". Editorial Nortesur. Retrieved 2013-08-16.
  4. Rodríguez Romero, Domingo. " Bertita Harding . Cronologia". Editorial Nortesur. Retrieved 2013-08-16.
  5. Rodríguez Romero, Domingo. " Bertita Harding . Cronologia". Editorial Nortesur. Retrieved 2013-08-16.
  6. Rodríguez Romero, Domingo. " Bertita Harding . Cronologia". Editorial Nortesur. Retrieved 2013-08-16.

Bibliography